4.5 Article

Investigating the potential of proton therapy for hypoxia-targeted dose escalation in non-small cell lung cancer

Journal

RADIATION ONCOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13014-021-01914-2

Keywords

NSCLC; Proton therapy; Tumor hypoxia; PET

Funding

  1. Strategic Focal Area Personalized Health and Related Technologies (PHRT) of the ETH Domain [2018-223]

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This study investigates the potential of proton therapy for patient-specific dose escalation in lung cancer treatment, showing that proton therapy can improve treatment outcomes and reduce side effects on normal tissues compared to conventional photon techniques.
Background Hypoxia is known to be prevalent in solid tumors such as non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and reportedly correlates with poor prognostic clinical outcome. PET imaging can provide in-vivo hypoxia measurements to support targeted radiotherapy treatment planning. We explore the potential of proton therapy in performing patient-specific dose escalation and compare it with photon volumetric modulated arc therapy (VMAT). Methods Dose escalation has been calibrated to the patient specific tumor response of ten stage IIb-IIIb NSCLC patients by combining HX4-PET imaging and radiobiological modelling of oxygen enhancement ratio (OER) to target variable tumor hypoxia. In a dose-escalation-by-contour approach, escalated dose levels were simulated to the most hypoxic region of the primary target and its effectiveness in improving loco-regional tumor control was assessed. Furthermore, the impact on normal tissue of proton treatments including dose escalation was evaluated in comparison to the normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) of conventional VMAT plans. Results Ignoring regions of tumor hypoxia can cause overestimation of TCP values by up to 10%, which can effectively be recovered on average to within 0.9% of the nominal TCP, using patient-specific dose escalations of up to 22% of the prescribed dose to PET defined hypoxic regions. Despite such dose escalations, the use of protons could also simultaneously reduce mean doses to the heart (- 14.3 Gy(RBE)), lung (- 8.3 Gy(RBE)), esophagus (- 6.9 Gy(RBE)) and spinal cord (- 3.8 Gy) compared to non-escalated VMAT plans. These reductions are predicted to lead to clinically relevant decreases in NTCP for radiation-induced pneumonitis (- 11.3%), high grade heart toxicity (- 7.4%) and esophagitis (- 7.5%). Conclusions This study suggests that the administration of proton therapy for dose escalation to patient specific regions of tumor hypoxia in the treatment of NSCLC can mitigate TCP reduction due to hypoxia-induced radio resistance, while simultaneously reducing NTCP levels even when compared to non-escalated treatments delivered with state-of-the-art photon techniques.

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